4.7 Article

The dissemination of antibiotics and their corresponding resistance genes in treated effluent-soil-crops continuum, and the effect of barriers

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 807, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151525

Keywords

Treated wastewater; Antibiotics; Resistance genes; Agriculture; Plastic mulch; Drip irrigation

Funding

  1. US-AID-MERC [M33-017]
  2. Israeli Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development [857-0723-14]

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The study found various antibiotics and corresponding resistance genes in treated effluent but not in freshwater. Regardless of water quality or crop type, the plastic-covered soil irrigated with effluent retained some antibiotics, although significant correlations between detected antibiotics and corresponding resistance genes were not observed. The findings disprove the hypothesis that treated effluent may carry antibiotics resistance genes to irrigated soil and crops.
Irrigation with treated effluent is expanding as freshwater sources diminish, but hampered by growing concerns of pharmaceuticals contamination, specifically antibiotics and resistance determinants. To evaluate this concern, freshwater and effluent were applied to an open field that was treated with soil barriers including plastic mulch together with surface and subsurface drip irrigation, cultivating freshly eaten crops (cucumbers or melons) for two consecutive growing seasons. We hypothesized that the effluent carries antibiotics and resistance determinants to the drip-irrigated soil and crops regardless of the treatment. To test our hypothesis, we monitored for antibiotics abundance (erythromycin, sulfamethoxazole, tetracycline, chlortetracycline, oxytetracydine, amoxicillin, and ofloxacin) and their corresponding resistance genes (ermB, ermF, sul1, tetW, tetO, bla(TEM) and qnrB), together with class 1 integron (intl1), and bacterial 16S rRNA, in water, soil, and crop samples taken over two years of cultivation. The results showed that an array of antibiotics and their corresponding resistance genes were detected in the effluent but not the freshwater. Yet, there were no significant differences in the distribution or abundance of antibiotics and resistance genes, regardless of the irrigation water quality, or crop type (p > 0.05), but plastic-covered soil irrigated with effluent retained the antibiotics oxytetracydine and ofloxacin (p < 0.05). However, we could not detect significant correlations between the detected antibiotics and the corresponding resistance genes. Overall, our findings disproved our hypothesis suggesting that treated effluent may not carry antibiotics resistance genes to the irrigated soil and crops yet, plastic mulch covered soil retain some antibiotics that may inflict long term contamination. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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